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Lets Married Man [ WHICH IS DAUGHTER: 7m Make Love to Her Admits She Is Doing Wrong But Continues to Listen to His Sentimental Bunk BY CYNTHIA GREY Contributed to the I Cream Cake HERE'S no laying the ghost of a certs stressing modern problem. This time a business g 3 : A “My employer is a happily married man. He is ex- ' f remely proud of his two small sons, Nevertheless, he ag : . nakes love to me, altho he wouldn't, perhaps, if I didn’t} ' tk yermit it “I suppose I deserve a good re} primanding, but instead ‘of giving it to me, I do wish you would tell me what can be the object of the man who makes love to a girl like when he is also devoted to his wife ERHAPS it is for the same reason that you listen to hin with pleasure while you know in your beart that you are & tre» passer. He probably gets out of it about what you de. You Matter eacn other you de ceive each other, or think you do. Romances of this kind are emotional explosions. The man swears his fidelity to his little wife, n his hat, goes down tow the girt that she ablesp me Cake Sponge Needs Wheel it thair mix an table n star Dror buttered tin 1 bak Lemon Jelly Cake up milk, white swears to the only girl oF aN unpleasant p j deal with, he ever loved! | Now, of course, a man of feat Please . or 3 # the Residents of Labette county, Kansas, are having a hard 4 Kind does not love either the | Case may be, v nur host| time telling which is the daughter Mrs. D 1\%?! eas and hostess, would say k - gnter as 18. LALON ANE) sugar. Mix, be Mife or the git, bat he loves | and héstess, would say, “I «!daughter, Suzanne, go about campaigning. Mra. Dixon ‘6 himself extremely well. histles and nettles fr h { f : from your | (right) is a candidate for the state legislature. She is 37. SCARF COLLARS Can't you, the writer of the above, leok into the future for years? What do you see? The wife will continue to have all that you ever had and » good deal more, She will continue to receive the familiar protestations Suzanne is 17 SHORT SKIRTS Cake Recipes Machine Tells What's Accordian Pleats the Very Latest Frock Style Wrong With Your Feet ( STOCKINGS! In choosing white silk exe plan to select those of |) sect heavy weave, rather than nd on a block of wood or « h the toes over the edge and yend the toes downward as far a» This is usually painful at t but gradually the feet become of gauge weight, since the leg is anything but pretty || when the flesh shows too plainly thru the stocking. || Moo vob anne ean a Pta e an) P PETES e feet on the rand ra 4 off the floor ou can toward the top of possible firw accustomed to It.’’ e th of something the man calls love and she will continue to have everything else a husband has te offer, the home, his support, | influence and social position. | In a few years the man will | be so tired of you he will long for a fresh young mind to won der at his wisdom. He will crave the admiration of a girl who has not discovered anv of hix weaknesses. And then he will hire a new assistant. He cannot dispose of a wile so easily, This is one of her ad- vantages, the particular one which makes her “hors con or not competing. love is a wonderful Unrequited love for a wonderful man may be worth the price of spinsierhood, but the love which «a man divides be tween his wife and another wom- an is sentimental bunk and not worth the price of junk. Letters Will Help Cheer This Man Dear Miss Grey: You and your | readers have helped so many people | solve their problems that { have de. cided to tell you about mine, which | looks like a mountain to me, but perhaps it is only a mole hill. | I am a single man, 34 years old, | and haye been an invalid since 1912, due tégheunmtism. I was confined | in bed over five years, but with | God’s help am now able to sit up. | With no income, the little capital I | had, of course, soon went for doc tor bills, etc., therefore, I would like | awfully well to find something that I could do to at least help earn an honest. livelihood. | My sister and her husband, who fare in very moderate circumstances, | ure caring for me. Being depend- ent on them, of course, makes my | Problem seem all the harder. A number of my friends have suggested that I take up writing of some kind. But I feel, Miss Grey, that I am not talented along that | Hine. Altho there perhaps ts little | else I could do yet, as my hands #eem to be quite badly deformed | and I am still unable to walk. | I would be very grateful if some of your readers could help me solve |}| this problem. | I love to get letters, so would be | glad to have you publish my full | address *o that those who cared to could write me. HENRY KREGER, Wash. R. 1, Box 163. Wants to Rename Infant Son Dear Miss Grey: I have a son, 1} year old, and would like to find out if it is possible to have his! given name changed. We wish to 8-, 9- and 10-Piece Dining Room Suites Bee paver tines ths preockt maime| hoe : Se a ee Sets of Dining Tables and Chairs Odd Dining Tables change it by Just calling him by Complete Suites and Odd Pieces of Bedroom Furniture court order? If so, Row the church register is altered. Gate-leg Tables tet the tour, tat I he had Windsor Chairs and Rockers ground the food markets he might | ae "irs Poster Beds Metal Beds showed them our markets; both | Fiber Furniture | | SuitesandOdd Preces of Upholstered Furniture | Odd Pieces of Novelty Furniture | were pleased with the flowers, but) most of all the beautifully arra trays of vegetables. who has traveled in many climes re nay is necessary to require that delivery of furniture purchased during th is sale be accepted by our customers during the month.of August at Frederick & Nelson’s convenience. é (FOURTH FLOOR) | marked as she stood before a stall) FREDERICK & NELSON’S Fifty-First Semi-Annual SALE of FURNITURE. | Now Progressing, Fourth Floor OOD Furniture for every room in the home and from some of the best | _ Sources in America is presented in this Semi-Annual Sale at prices | which provide very positive advantages to the homeowners of the North- west. Among the important lots offered are the following: » Centralia, Answers Letter From Tourist Dear Miss Grey: PI Who has lived y years in Call- fornia and an admirer of that wonder- |}) ful state, that while we who live in| Seattle may be asleep any way our} Streets are kept beautifully cle and while we may not have flower | markets out at wharves and depots to greet the tourist, that if he had | { | i lease say for one Console Tables and Mirrors Mattresses of bright yellow carrots and gree n| peas wet with clear drops of Ce river water, “Aren't they lovely just like flowers wet with dew.” And | | she was by means a woman with | no thought of gluttony uppermost | in her mind, 1 have lived all over the staté of | California’ and aloofness and indif-| ference of which we are acoused |4.| by far not a Seattle product. Indeed, | the Qneeu of Sheba would have blushed with shame at her own dig-| nity in comparison with tho ladies | of the sales department in the stores | #1 California, but Tam not an of. There’s a hearty western welcome in that cup of Hills Bros Coffee SYMBOL of western hospitality, pride of the coffee-loving West! A tradition of wonderful coffee, born in homes of wealth and natural discrimination throughout the West and carried to every port of civ- ilization on the globe. A reputation to sustain! How well that reputation is guarded, In the Original , H a 7 u acuum - Pac aac! you will know the instant you puncture Heat ihe clffee ra the vacuum seal of a tin of Hills Bros. Coffee. Get that aroma! The perfume of rare coffee-oils. And the flavor is equally satisfying. No wonder they call “Red Can” The Recognized Standard! Lest the tiniest wisp of flavor escape, we seal it tight in vacuum. You know Red Can will still be fresh whenever you break the seal—days, weeks, years later! With all its high quality, Hills Bros. Coffee is not high-priced. It is econom- ical to buy—and economical to use. Hills Bros., San Francisco, HILLS BROS COFFEE © 1924, Hille Bros. paca